MAY 22, 1959 16 PAGES and Installed Were Max Alperin, ------,------~-- Daniel Jacobs and Jacob S

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MAY 22, 1959 16 PAGES and Installed Were Max Alperin, ------,------~-- Daniel Jacobs and Jacob S ~"" ..~ . ' Temple Be.th El l;O TEMPU: 8Ufl--EL LIS ARY 70 Orchar.d Ave. Pr0videiu~e. R• .r. Elect Arthur Kaplan As Temple Emanuel President Arthur Kaplan was elected pres­ ident of Temple Emanuel at the 34th Annual Meeting of the Tem­ ple held on May 17 and was in­ THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH WEEKLY IN R. I. AND SOUTHEAST MASS. stalled by Rabbi Eli A. Bohnen. Other officers who were elected VOL. XLIII, No. 11 FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1959 16 PAGES and installed were Max Alperin, -----------,-------- ---------------- -----------~-- Daniel Jacobs and Jacob S. Tem- kin, vice-presidents; Martin M. Anti-Semitism Still Renominate Henry Hassenfeld Zucker, recording secretary; How­ ard E. Schneider, financial secre­ P t I G As GJC Head -For Fifth Term tary and Leo H. Rosen, treasurer. resen n ermany Henry J. Hassenfeld has been Morris Schussheim, Herman N. Board members who were elected NEW YORK _ A "few Nazi- renominated for a fifth term as Silverman, Milton $tanzler, Joe are Harry Albert, Benjamin Brier, minded bullies" harass Jews in president of the General Jewish Thaler and Jack Westerman. Bertram Brown, Archie Chaset, Germany today, while the major­ Committee of Providence. l:!erving on the nominating com­ Lester Cohen, Nat C. Cohen, Na­ ity of Germans look on with indif­ Leonard Y. Goldman, chairman mittee with Mr. Goldman are Alter than Curland, Hyman Cotton, ference, Look Magazine reported of the nominating committee, said Boyman, Mrs. Julius Irving, Sol Archie Fain, Irving I. Fain, Louis last week. Mr. Hassenfeld, Rhode Island civic Koffler, Joseph W. Ress, Norman Fain, Hyman Fishbein, Maurice Despite a flurry of -anti-Semitic leader and industrialist, was re­ Tilles, Cyril Berkelhammer, Ben­ Fox, David Friedman, Burton Fin­ incidents including desecration of nominated for a fifth term in jamin W. Grossman and Dr. Car­ berg, · Samuel Garr, Leonard Y. Jewish synagogues and cemeteries, recognition of "his outstanding roll M . Silver. Goldman, Abraham E. Goldstein, "a new wave of anti-Semitism is service for the past four years as Members of the board of direc­ Adrian Goldstein, Simon S. Green­ Arthur Kaplan not sweeping Germany," the mag­ head of the GJC and for his un­ tors for a term ending in 1960 are berg, Alfred H. Gilstein, Henry Hassenfeld, Harold W. Kahn, azine commented. selfish devotion to the numerous Bertram L. Bernhardt, Dr. Nathan congregation as financial secre­ The Look article presents a de­ J ewish causes down through the A. Bolotow, Dr. Philip Dorenbaum, Sherwin J. Kapstein, Sol Koffler, Judge Frank Licht, Jacob Licht, tary from jts early beginnings, was tailed report on the anti-Semitism years." A. Archie Finkelstein, Samuel Samuel Malkin, David Meyers, similarly honored. encountered by one Jewish family Annual Meeting Friedman, Arthur · S. Galkin, The nominating committee con­ The nomination of Mr. Hassen­ Louis B. Rubinstein, Clarence in a small town near Frankfurt Abraham E. Goldstein, Max L. sisted of Samuel Rosen, chairman; and draws the following conclu­ feld and other officers for the Schneider, Edwin Soforenko, Her­ Grant, Louis Handwerger, Merrill man Swartz, Louis J . Temkin, Harry Albert, Benjamin Brier, Irv­ sions: year 1959-60 will be presented for Hassenfeld, Harry Leach, Joseph ing I . Fain, David Friedman, Jo­ - 1 - The presence of many Nazi election at the GJC annual meet­ Irving Wattman, and Harold K. Levy, Simon S. Lessler, Mrs. Weiner. - seph W. Ress, Clarence Schneider, holdovers in local and state gov­ ing on June 8 at the Sheraton­ David Meyers, Julius C. Michael­ Edwin Soforenko, and Julius Biltmore _Hotel. ernments, in the courts and in son, Ernest Nathan, Benton The nominating committee pre­ Zucker. schools, helps sustain the indiffer­ Other officers renominated are Odessa, Lawrence A. Paley, Albert sented a motion which was passed The Annual Meeting and Dinner ence of Germans to anti-Semitism. Irving J . Fain, Sidney A . Kane, Pilavin, Harold Ratush, Israel by the congregation to name the were arranged by a committee 2' - Schools, churches and other Arthur Kaplan, Judge Frank Licht Resnick, Max J. Richter, Norman retiring officers as honorary offi­ which included Daniel Jacobs, institt:~ions are not telling German and Joseph W. Ress, vice presi­ Robinson, Samuel Salmanson, Na­ cers i:1 the positions held by them. chairman; Benjamin Brier, Morris The list of honorary officers of youth about the Hitler period. dents; Sidney L. Rabinowitz, sec­ than Samors, Sol J . Schiff, Joseph Bromberg, Mrs. Lester Emers, Mrs. the congregation includes Judge 3 - The anti-Semitic flurry has retary, and Samuel Rapaporte, Jr., Schlossberg, James Siegal, Edwin Alfred Fain, Irving I. Fain, Burton lit a fire under the federal govern­ treasurer. s. Soforenko, William D. Strong, Philip C. Joslin, Samuel Rosen and Herman J . Aisenberg, honor­ Finberg, Adrian Goldstein, Simon ment and instructions have gone Archibald Silverman and Alvin Walte1; I. Sundlun, Charles Swartz, S. Greenberg, Harold W. Kahn, ary presidents; Samuel M. Magid, out to crack down hard on of­ A. Sopkin are honorary presidents. Mrs. Henry W. Markoff, Herman (Continued on Page 7) Morris Espo and Alexander Rump­ fenders. Joseph Galkin is executive director. C. Selya, Clarence Schneider, How­ ler, honorary vice-presidents and 4 - There is increasing grum­ Nominated to the board of direc­ ard E. Schneider, Mrs. Ann Wexler, CAMPAIGN WORKERS Ernest Blazar, honorary financial bling about being "taxed for the tors for a three year term, expiring Martin M. Zucker, Rabbi Eli A. TO MEET ON MONDAY Jews" as the result of German in 1962, are Fred Abrams, Herman secretary. Bohnen, and Hermari J. Aisenberg, compensation to Jewish individu­ Morton Smith, chairman of The honorary board members J. Aisenberg, Ben R. Albert, Irving the membership campaign of ex-officio. als and Israel. Baker, Dr. Ilie Berger, Max Ber­ are Herman Bernstein, Louis Hur­ the Jewish Home for the Aged, witz, Mrs. Philip C. Joslin, Edward 5_- Jews in big cities have little man, Bo Bernstein, Alter Boyman, has announced that the first trouble but refrain from social Rabbi William G. Braude, Rabbi Kossove, Abraham H. Rotman, and Smash Secret N'azi Gang meeting of captains and work­ Benjamin I. Sass. contact with Germans. Until the Abraham Chill, Martin I. Dittel­ ers for the campaign will be recent trouble, several hundred man, Arthur Einstein, Archie Fain, held at the Home on Monday As a token of its esteem the con­ Of High School Students Jews had been returning to Ger­ Charles J. Fox, Dr. David Freed­ at 8 P. M. Cards will- be dis­ gregation presented an inscribed many every month for the past man, Louis Garfinkel, James Gold­ tributed at this meeting. Kiddush Cup to Mr .. Aisenberg. - WAYNE, N . J .-A secret student two years. man, Lewis M. Goldstein, Albert I . Mr. Smith · said that the en­ Bibles bound in silver, were pre­ society calling itself "The Nazi 6 - A real threat of anti-Semit­ Gordon, Burleigh Greenberg, Stan­ thusiasm of the 53 captains sented to Morris Espo a11d Alex­ Regime of America" was smashed ism can develop only if there is a ley Gr<.Ssman, 801 P. Kaufman. who came to the May 13 meet­ ander Rumpler, retiring vice-presi­ and twelve ot its members sus­ serious economic crisis or an ex­ Lewish Korn._ Max Margolis, Jo­ ing promises a most successful dents, in recognition of eleven pended following an investigation treme nationalistic movement be­ seph W. Pulver, Paul J. Robin, campaign. years of service in this office. by school superintendent Dr. John cause of external developments. Benjamin F. Ruttenberg, Rabbi Ernest Blazar, who had served the H. Martin when school authorities discovered iron crosses, swastikas, Nazi arm bands and literature in Botanist Experiments With Farming As Practiced In Primitive Times desks and lockers. SUBEITA, Israel - Fruit trees ample evidence of a thriving agri­ five inches of rain that normally ample cistern is being restored for The twelve, all students at two were planted this winter in the culture in the ruins of terraces, falls in the-region each_winter but their use. local high schools, are said to come parched Negev highlands by a Pro­ spillways. conduits and cisterns also rain water streaming down Theory Will Be Tested from middle Income families, were fessor of Botany who quit the vice near the ancient cities along the from the surrounding hills. He in­ Specifically, they will examine released in custody of their par­ presidency of the Hebrew Univer­ Nabatean caravan routes between stalled clockwork gauges at the Professor Evenari's theory. He be­ ents pending action by the Passaic sity in J ersualem to farm in the Southern Arabia and the Medi­ intakes to measure the flow and lieves that the resourceful farmers County Juvenile Court. wilderness. terranean coast. used boards as floodgates in the of ancient times had discovered The youths, according to Dr. If Prof. Michael Evenari's trees Restore Ancient Farm spillways in place of the sto"ne slabs that the soil on the slopes, when Martin, held meetings in Nazi uni­ bloom, they will open prospects for One of these ancient farms at used by the Nabateans. Otherwise, moistened became crusty and forms, bought Nazi war souvenirs transforming 1,000 square miles of Subeita has been restored by the the farm is the same as in ancient practically impermeable. They from a mail order firm, collected desert. Israeli Government as a tourist times. therefore raked together the stones guns and built a six-inch pipe­ Extraordinary Feature site. Workers from the immigrants' Trees Planted After Rain and bared the soil of the hillsides bomb. An extraordinary feature of the Negev town, Tel Yeruham, recon­ After the first heavy rain flood­ so that it should become an im­ They also affected the G~rman experiment is that the scientist structed the rough stone fences ed the farm this winter, the trees permeable pavement.
Recommended publications
  • 2021 Pac-12 Baseball STANDINGS
    2021 Pac-12 Baseball STANDINGS (as of Jun 24, 2021) P a c - 1 2 Overall Team W L T Pct W L T Pct Last 10 Streak Home Away Neutral Arizona 21 9 0 . 7 0 0 45 18 0 . 7 1 4 6-4 L 2 31-8 10-8 4-2 Oregon 20 10 0 . 6 6 7 39 16 0 . 7 0 9 5-5 L 2 23-9 16-7 0-0 Stanford 17 10 0 . 6 3 0 39 17 0 . 6 9 6 6-4 L 1 24-6 14-9 1-2 UCLA 18 12 0 . 6 0 0 37 20 0 . 6 4 9 6-4 L 1 21-9 14-9 2-2 Oregon State 16 14 0 . 5 3 3 37 24 0 . 6 0 7 5-5 L 1 17-9 15-12 5-3 Arizona State 16 14 0 . 5 3 3 33 22 0 . 6 0 0 3-7 L 2 22-11 10-10 1-1 California 15 15 0 . 5 0 0 29 26 0 . 5 2 7 5-5 L 1 18-12 11-14 0-0 Washington State 13 17 0 . 4 3 3 26 23 0 . 5 3 1 4-6 W 1 10-11 16-12 0-0 USC 13 17 0 . 4 3 3 25 26 0 . 4 9 0 5-5 W 1 17-15 8-11 0-0 Utah 7 23 0 . 2 3 3 17 33 0 . 3 4 0 3-7 L 1 10-12 7-21 0-0 Washington 6 21 0 .
    [Show full text]
  • 1964 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1964 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Dick Ellswo1963 NL ERA Leaders Bob Friend Sandy Koufax 2 Camilo Pasc1963 AL ERA Leaders Gary Peters Juan Pizarro 3 Sandy Kouf1963 NL Pitching Leaders Jim Maloney Juan Marichal Warren Spahn 4 Jim Bouton1963 AL Pitching Leaders Whitey Ford Camilo Pascual 5 Don Drysda1963 NL Strikeout Leaders Sandy Koufax Jim Maloney 6 Jim Bunnin 1963 AL Strikeout Leaders Camilo Pascual Dick Stigman 7 Hank Aaron1963 NL Batting Leaders Roberto Clemente Tommy Davis Dick Groat 8 Al Kaline 1963 AL Batting Leaders Rich Rollins Carl Yastrzemski 9 Hank Aaron1963 NL Home Run Leaders Orlando Cepeda Willie Mays Willie McCovey 10 Bob Allison1963 AL Home Run Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 11 Hank Aaron1963 NL RBI Leaders Ken Boyer Bill White 12 Al Kaline 1963 AL RBI Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 13 Hoyt Wilhelm 14 Dick Nen Dodgers Rookies Nick Willhite 15 Zoilo Versalles Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 16 John Boozer 17 Willie Kirkland 18 Billy O'Dell 19 Don Wert 20 Bob Friend 21 Yogi Berra 22 Jerry Adair 23 Chris Zachary 24 Carl Sawatski 25 Bill Monbouquette 26 Gino Cimoli 27 New York Mets Team Card 28 Claude Osteen 29 Lou Brock 30 Ron Perranoski 31 Dave Nicholson 32 Dean Chance 33 Sammy EllisReds Rookies Mel Queen 34 Jim Perry 35 Eddie Mathews 36 Hal Reniff 37 Smoky Burgess 38 Jimmy Wynn 39 Hank Aguirre 40 Dick Groat 41 Willie McCoFriendly Foes Leon Wagner 42 Moe Drabowsky 43 Roy Sievers 44 Duke Carmel 45 Milt Pappas 46 Ed Brinkman 47 Jesus Alou Giants Rookies Ron Herbel 48 Bob Perry 49 Bill Henry 50 Mickey
    [Show full text]
  • Looting Jhaf Jgpof Fs
    looting JHaf fs Bums N. L. Race Hot as Jgpof M Bosox A. L. D Nail Washington. C Saturday, September 14.1946—B—20 Keep Flag ose or Dodgers' Higbe Curbs Vernon Adds to Lead Golf Club Championships Won By FRANCIS E. STANN Cardinals; Williams' At Bat as Nats Bow By Kreuzburg and Franklin A Skipper Who Scrapes the Hull Homer Something new has been added to the President's Cup RegattR. Nips Tribe In St. Louis Tilt which was to start this with the races off Ha ins morning sailing By Joe Reichler Special Dispatch to The Star Point. For the first time star class boats will appear in Washington's Associated Press Sports Writer ST. 14—The Nate first annual water classic since 1941. LOUIS. Sept. One of were to battle the St. Louis We went down to the Capital Yacht Club yesterday to see a the reasons Brooklyn has Browns; ; for the last time this season here star class Doai ana io nna Annul ueacun 01 taken the Dodgers baseball team to ; today and the Nate were comforted Larchmont, N. Y.. who had been established its heart is because those unpre- by that thought. St. Louis’ seventh the favorite, to his surprise, chiefly because in j dictable Bums never know' when place- club had a 13-8 over: 1943 he won the international star class cham- j edge •Washington for the year. pionship. j they’re licked. : Mickey Vernon, the Nats' leagtie- Now a star boat is no or. if it is, it's an Knocked silly by the St.
    [Show full text]
  • Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1967-1968
    Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1967-1968 Eastern Kentucky University Year 1968 Eastern Progress - 04 Apr 1968 Eastern Kentucky University This paper is posted at Encompass. http://encompass.eku.edu/progress 1967-68/24 (> Miss Richmond Restless Contestants Generation Ra&e 8 ®Ij? Eastern Progress Sounds Setting The Pace In A Progressive Era 45th Year No. 24 Student Publication of Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Ky. 10 Pages Thursday, April 4, 1968 'We'll Have to Wait and See' LBJ's Bombing Halt Draws Varied Student Reactions HY KECALD B. SMITH hy restraint by Hanoi.* ditional 13,500 support troops news media, and the nation at PROGRESS NEWS EDITOR The President added that he to Vietnam in the next five could not stop all the bombing, large to "guard against the President Lyndon II. Johnson months. These troops will con- works of divisiveness, against shocked Hie nation last Sunday because of the endangerment of sist of men on active duty and the lives of American and South partly of reserve units which bigotry, against the corrupting night when he announce") that he evils of partisanship in any would not accept the nomination Vietnamese troops. "Whether a will be called up for service. guise." of Ins party for another term as complete bombing halt becomes He said these troops are need- During his address, Johnson President. possible in the future will bede- ed to support the 11,000 extra also announced that he had in- Coming as even a greater termined by events," said John- Marines and paratroopers who vited South Vietnamese Presi- surprise to the college students son.
    [Show full text]
  • Vol. 41, No. 2 (March 2002)
    (Volume 41, No. 2, Mar. 2, 2002) Feb. 5—Hitter: Chad Corona, OF, San Diego State; Pitcher: Ryan Schroyer, P, Arizona State Feb. 12—Hitter: Shaun Larkin, 2B, Cal State Northridge; Pitcher: Phillip Aragon, Nicholls State Feb. 19—Hitter: Ryan Schade, SS, Western Carolina; Pitcher: Jared Theodorakos, Baylor Feb. 26—Hitter: Jesse Crain, SS, Houston; Co-Pitchers: Shane Komine, Nebraska; Joe Linde, Eastern Michigan. ‘Canes to Face Florida Marlins on March 6 This ‘N That in the Early Going Alabama opened the 2002 with its school-record ninth straight opening day win, posting a 4-0 victory over Louisiana Tech Tuesday night at Sewell-Thomas Stadium. ‘Bama has won every season opener since 1994, including all eight under Coach Jim Wells. The previous record was eight straight opening day wins set from 1901-08. The game also marked the Crimson Tide's ninth straight home opener, also a school record. Performing key roles in some of the early contests 2002 have been two of the Iowa State transfers who starred for coach Lyle Smith before the program was dropped after the 2001 season. Texas pitcher Alan Bomer of Altoona, Iowa, was 1-0 with a 2.16 ERA and 11 strikeouts in his first 8 1/3 innings while Texas Tech IF Jake Brown of Prescott Valley, Ariz., started the first three games of 2002 at 3B for the Red Raiders and drove in four runs in his first eight contests. Missouri P Aaron Patterson of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is expected to see ample action in ’02 while other former ISU standouts are Central Florida P Lincoln Mincks and Illinois OF Brandon Cashman.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1946-10-16
    GOOD MORNING, IOWA CITYI Considerable cloudiness and scattered showers to­ day. Somewhat cooler tonight with the low tem­ owaJll perature about 40. Cloudy and warmer tomorrow. No. 19-~P News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa. Wednesday. Oct. IS. 1945-Five Cents · '':-. -n· .' r .... ill Ir, * "* '* * * * * * * ow ~ards Clip Boston, 4-3, For Crimes Against Humanity No.2 Nazi OIl Takes Poison · " • 110 Win World Series In Jail Cell ST. LOUIS (JP)-An almost un­ By GAYLE TALBOT Culberson, Boston center fielder, "' believable piece of base running and had plenty of time to nail the 10 Others of 'Hitler ... bY Enos (Country) Slaughter and raced all the way home from first flying "Country," but for' some slout·hearted relief pitching by base with the winning run in the inexplicable reason he "froze" and ~ang' Go to Death Hant (The Cat) Brecheen in the eighth inning on a Simple line held the ball just long enough to On Nuernberg Scaffold nin~ inning enabled the St. Louis drive into centerfield by Harry enable Slaughter to slide in under , Cardinals to pull out a thrilling 4 Walker on which any runner ex­ the throw. ' to 3 victory yesterday in thc cept a Cardinal would have pulled As exciting a championship N ERNBERG , Wednesday = deGtding game of the World Series. up at third. play-off as perhaps evcr was ,(AP) - Hermann Goering, the Slaughter, catching the Boston Johnny Pesky, Red Sox sbort­ fought out ended some 10 minutes o. 2 man of the dead Nazi 1'e­ Red Sox completely by surprise, stop, took the relay from Legn later as Brccheen quelled a last­ gime, cheated the noo c by tak· ditch Boston rally and retired the ing poison ill his prison cell last J.
    [Show full text]
  • WASHINGTON STATE (22-17, 9-12 Pac-12) (22-17, 9-12 Pac-12) Pullman, Wash
    WSUCOUGARS.COM | Baseball Contact | Bobby Alworth | 509-335-5785 (O) | 951-452-6129 (C) | [email protected] 2021 SCHEDULE/RESULTS NO. 16 UCLA (25-14, 12-9 Pac-12) at WASHINGTON STATE (22-17, 9-12 Pac-12) (22-17, 9-12 Pac-12) Pullman, Wash. | Bailey-Brayton Field | May 7-9, 2021 Friday, 6:05 p.m. | Saturday, 2:05 p.m. | Sunday, 1:05 p.m. FEBRUARY (7-1) 2/19 UC Davis Davis, Calif. W, 11-1 UCLA PROBABLE STARTERS WASHINGTON STATE 2/20 UC Davis (7) Davis, Calif. W, 12-5 Zach Pettway | Sr. | RHP | 1-3, 2.45 ERA, 49 K, 51.0 IP Brandon White | Jr. | RHP | 5-3, 5.26 ERA, 48 K, 51.1 IP 2/20 UC Davis Davis, Calif. W, 5-3 Sean Mullen | Jr. | RHP | 8-1, 2.45 ERA, 73 K, 55.0 IP Zane Mills | Jr. | RHP | 5-3, 3.51 ERA, 71 K, 66.2 IP 2/21 UC Davis Davis, Calif. L, 5-13 Jesse Bergin | So. | RHP | 4-3, 3.86 ERA, 43 K, 53.2 IP TBA 2/25 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 6-3 2/26 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 19-5 2/27 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 15-1 BROADCAST INFO SERIES HISTORY 2/28 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 10-3 WEBSTREAM: wsucougars.com HISTORY: UCLA leads 59-24 GAME STREAK: UCLA +7 MARCH (5-7) LIVESTATS: wsucougars.com SERIES STREAK: UCLA +2 3/5 Seattle U Pullman, Wash. W, 6-1 LAST MEETING: 2019, UCLA won series 3-0 (Pullman) 3/6 Seattle U Pullman, Wash.
    [Show full text]
  • Brand New Vintage Sets 1955 BOWMAN FOOTBALL 1972-73 TOPPS 1962 TOPPS FOOTBALL Complete SET BASKETBALL COMPLETE SET Complete SET
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #165 Brand New Vintage Sets 1955 BOWMAN FOOTBALL 1972-73 TOPPS 1962 TOPPS FOOTBALL Complete SET BASKETBALL COMPLETE SET Complete SET Condition sensitive set with black borders, many EX/EX+, Average grade is EX+/EX-MT, some NR-MT, a few less. some EX-MT, some VG-EX/EX. Difficult and expensive Nice set (missing #100 Jabbar) – mainly EX-MT, some Classic 65 year old set. Includes Layne EX-MT, Walker to put together card-by-card due to the tough single NR-MT, a few less. Very consistent and sharp. A hot #1 EX+, Gifford EX+/EX-MT, Ameche rookie VG-EX, Ford prints in the set. Includes Unitas EX+/EX-MT, Berry EX+/ set due to Chamberlain, Jabbar, Erving, etc. Includes rookie VG, Van Brocklin EX, J.H. Johnson rookie EX, EX-MT, Ditka front VG-EX, back 2 small tears, Brown Chamberlain EX-MT, Maravich EX-MT, Robertson Perry EX-MT, Summerall rookie EX-MT/NR-MT, Blanda VG-EX print line, Ernie Davis VG-EX creased, Meredith EX-MT, Phil Jackson rookie EX+/EX-MT, West EX-MT, EX-MT, Ringo rookie EX+/EX-MT, Tittle EX, St. Clair EX+, Starr EX+/EX-MT, Hornung EX+/EX-MT, Taylor Jabbar A.S. EX-MT, Chamberlain A.S. EX-MT, Erving rookie NR-MT mc, Gatski rookie EX-MT, Landry rookie EX-MT, Packers team VG-EX, checklist 1 EX unmarked, rookie NR-MT back oc, Erving A.S. EX+/EX-MT, etc. VG-EX/EX, etc. $1375.00 Tarkenton VG-EX, Gifford VG-EX/EX, checklist 2 nice $1599.00 but several pencil marks, Marchetti PSA 7 NM oc, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]
  • St. Louis Cardinals (30-28 in 2020) Vs. Cincinnati Reds (31-29 in 2020) Game No
    St. Louis Cardinals (30-28 in 2020) vs. Cincinnati Reds (31-29 in 2020) Game No. 1 • Road Game No. 1 • Great American Ball Park • Thursday, April 1, 2021 RHP Jack Flaherty (4-3, 4.91 in 2020) vs. RHP Luis Castillo (4-6, 3.21 in 2020) OPENING DAY: The St. Louis Cardinals open their 130th season of play in the Na- OPENING DAY LEADERS tional League today as they visit the division-rival Cincinnati Reds in the opening CARDINALS vs. REDS Cardinals Rank HR Games game of the regular season ... The Cardinals are 59-68-2 (.464 win pct.) overall on All-Time (1892-2020):.......................1,197-1,091 1. Albert Pujols 4 11 Opening Day, including a 23-36 (.393) mark on the road. ROAD OPENERS: Since in St. Louis (1892-2020) ................................. 663-478 Yadier Molina 4 16 2010, the Cardinals open their season on the road for the 9th time in 12 seasons at Sportsman’s/Robison Field (1892-1920) .. 125-143 3. Stan Musial 3 21 (at Busch Stadium in 2011 vs. SD, 2017 vs. CHI, & 2020 vs. PIT). at Sportsman’s Park/Busch I (1920-66) ....... 319-171 Cardinals Rank RBI Games VS. THE RED LEGS: Today marks St. Louis’ 19th Opening Day meeting against at Busch Stadium II (1966-2005) ................. 139-119 1. Stan Musial 14 21 Cincinnati, with the Cardinals holding an all-time 10-8 margin (9-8 in Cincinnati) at Busch Stadium III (2006-20) ........................ 81-45 2. Albert Pujols 13 11 and winning the last three (2014, 2010, 1994) and five of the last six.
    [Show full text]
  • Southpaws Aplenty in Cougs' Bullpen
    COLLEGE BASEBALL PREVIEW: WASHINGTON STATE Southpaws aplenty in Cougs’ bullpen 2018 schedule Times and dates are subject to change. All times are Pacific. (*) = Pac-12 game. eft-handers only make up about 10 percent of the world’s population, 2/16 UC Riverside Tempe, Ariz. 11a per a quick Google search, but lefties are set to make up 80 percent of COUGARS Washington State’s starting pitchers. 2/17 Nebraska Tempe, Ariz. 11a L Some pitchers will undoubtedly fluctuate between starter and re- 2/18 Nebraska Tempe, Ariz. 11a liever throughout the season until everyone settles into 2/18 UC Riverside Tempe, Ariz. 3p a role, but coach Marty Lees already has his top three 2/20 Grand Canyon Phoenix 6p starters picked out: seniors Cody Anderson and Scotty 2/23 Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. 1p Sunitsch and sophomore Isaac Mullins. 2/24 Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. 11a Anderson posted a 5-4 record and 3.40 ERA as the Cou- 2/25 Alabama Tuscaloosa, Ala. 7a gars’ ace last season and Sunitsch moves to the rotation after 3/1 Sacramento St. Pullman 4p posting a 4.17 ERA and eight saves as the team’s closer. 3/2 Sacramento St. Pullman 4p Mullins hopes to improve on his last season numbers 3/3 Sacramento St. Pullman 2p after going 2-4 with a 6.14 ERA in 291/3 innings. 3/4 Sacramento St. Pullman 1p “We’re able to start possibly all three lefthanders right 3/8 Saint Mary’s Pullman 4p > COACH now, but we’d like to be able to get to where those right- 3/9 Saint Mary’s Pullman 4p Marty Lees, third handers emerge,” Lees said.
    [Show full text]
  • Cougar Quick Hits Broadcast Info Series History
    WSUCOUGARS.COM | Baseball Contact | Bobby Alworth | 509-335-5785 (O) | 951-452-6129 (C) | [email protected] 2021 SCHEDULE/RESULTS WASHINGTON (19-28, 5-19 Pac-12) at WASHINGTON STATE (24-22, 11-16 Pac-12) (24-22, 11-16 Pac-12) Pullman, Wash. | Bailey-Brayton Field | May 27-29, 2021 Thursday, 3:05 p.m. | Friday, 3:05 p.m. | Saturday, 1:05 p.m. FEBRUARY (7-1) 2/19 UC Davis Davis, Calif. W, 11-1 WASHINGTON PROBABLE STARTERS WASHINGTON STATE 2/20 UC Davis (7) Davis, Calif. W, 12-5 Logan Gerling | RS-Jr. | RHP | 2-5, 4.18 ERA, 60 K, 71.0 IP Brandon White | Jr. | RHP | 5-4, 5.46 ERA, 55 K, 62.2 IP 2/20 UC Davis Davis, Calif. W, 5-3 Tyson Guerrero | RS-So. | LHP | 2-3, 2.57 ERA, 48 K, 49.0 IP Zane Mills | Jr. | RHP | 5-4, 3.61 ERA, 80 K, 77.1 IP 2/21 UC Davis Davis, Calif. L, 5-13 Adam Bloebaum | Fr. | LHP | 2-4, 3.92 ERA, 57 K, 57.1 IP TBA 2/25 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 6-3 2/26 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 19-5 2/27 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 15-1 BROADCAST INFO SERIES HISTORY 2/28 Dixie State St. George, Utah W, 10-3 TV: Pac-12 Networks (Thursday - Friday) SERIES HISTORY: WSU leads series 244-197 Pac-12 Network - Washington (Saturday) SERIES STREAK: UW +2 MARCH (5-7) PLAY-BY-PLAY: Greg Heister LAST MEETING: 2019, UW won series 2-1 (Pullman) 3/5 Seattle U Pullman, Wash.
    [Show full text]